Founded in 1993 by brothers Tom and David Gardner, The Motley Fool helps millions of people attain financial freedom through our website, podcasts, books, newspaper column, radio show, and premium investing services.

Investors Still Questioning AT&T's DIRECTV Bid

AT&T and DIRECTV are both down on continued reports surrounding their merger, but one Fool thinks it's good for both sides.

U.S. stock markets are mixed today the latest report of U.S. retail sales fell short of expectations. The Commerce Department said that retail sales rose 0.1% in April, lower than the 0.4% forecast. But let's not forget that these increases are measured month over month and March's retail sales jumped 1.5%, so just maintaining that rate was a positive sign.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average(DJINDICES:^DJI) was up a paltry 0.11% in mixed trading as of 3:30 p.m. EDT.

AT&T's drag on the Dow One company heading in the wrong direction today is AT&T(NYSE:T), which is reportedly readying a $50 billion offer for satellite-TV provider DIRECTV(NASDAQ:DTV). The stock was down 1.2%, while DIRECTV's shares slid 0.7% in late trading.

The deal is reportedly for a combination of cash and stock, which would make it more of a merger than simply a buyout. At $50 billion, it's also not a big premium from DIRECTV's current $44 billion market cap.

AT&T stores may soon sell wireless service and satellite TV.

Consumers are cutting the cable cord, including satellite, where DIRECTV has seen subscriber growth slow. The company has exclusive content that could be valuable to deliver via other mediums, and that's where AT&T comes in. Not only does it have wireline subscribers, but AT&T's wireless network is one of the best in the country and adding content subscriptions to cell phone packages could be the future of media.

The key in the future of media will be either owning content or the delivery infrastructure; DIRECTV has the satellite side, AT&T has the wireless business, and wireline broadband would complete the next-generation triple play for the telecom.

The complications come in dividing the proverbial piece, establishing the merged company's management, and determining how AT&T's huge 5% dividend yield will be paid. Once those questions are answered, I think the deal makes a lot of sense for AT&T. It sees the content landscape changing and is adapting along with it in an effort to play a bigger role for consumers. Strategically, I think that makes the DIRECTV buyout good for both sides.